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Andy Cohen Posts Throwback Photo From 1983

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What's more fun than when celebrities post photos of themselves from decades ago?

Well... a lot of things. But this "Throwback Thursday" photo from Andy Cohen is actually pretty stellar. Check out baby-faced Andy Cohen -- braces and all -- in this shot from 1983:

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Throw THIS back! Me and my girl Jeanne Messing rocking it out at a dance in 1983. Looks like I went with a maroon sweater....

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Hard to believe that little boy would grow up to be the media mogul he's become!

Interview: Cyndi Lauper's Kinky Boots Are Changing the World

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Winner of six Tony Awards, the Broadway hit musical Kinky Boots debuted on The Great White Way in October 2012 and hasn't slowed down since. The popular musical is based on the 2005 film Kinky Boots, which was serendipitously inspired by a true story. With music and lyrics by Cyndi Lauper and a book by Harvey Fierstein, Kinky Boots was bound for stardom the minute it entered the joint. The Broadway community received the show "with open arms and open hearts!" according to Lauper.

"We were knocked out by the reception, but not shocked," Lauper said. "It just felt so good throughout the process and great reactions all the way from the workshops moving forward from industry folks, and family and friends that got to see some of the early rehearsals. So when we finally got an audience in there and they liked it as much, we were so happy. We felt pretty good about it, but to see people laugh and cry and dance during the show, at every show, has been just awesome."

How did Lauper celebrate after learning of the show's monumental theatre wins?

"I actually got on a plane to go to Las Vegas the next morning to do an event for the show for a Broadway Across America convention," she laughed. "I kid you not. I think I went from the after Tony party to my apartment to pack, [and then] to the airport...I'm still tired!"

Working with Torch Song Trilogy Tony winning actor Fierstein has been nothing short of a dream come true for Lauper. She described the Hairspray alum as "brilliant, funny, generous, friend and my Mommy Dearest [he calls me Christina]."

Creating a musical was a departure for Lauper, but one that she welcomed.

"The first records I ever heard were my mother's Broadway cast recordings. The first time I ever sang was singing along with those records and performing in front of my relatives and neighbors," she said. "So to come full circle and be able to work on a musical and be welcomed into the Broadway community was a dream come true."

With "True Colors" and "Girls Just Wanna Have Fun" echoing through the airwaves even to this day, how did Lauper fare writing a score for the stage?

"Your job as the songwriter, as the composer for a musical, is to help move the story forward in song. Harvey would send me scenes and say, 'In this scene, there needs to be a song that says this, from the perspective of this character who is feeling this...' So you have to just figure out what the character is going through," she explained. "You need to get into that head space. It's about honoring the story, helping the story being told. Which, of course, is a lot different from writing your own songs for a CD that gets played on the radio!"

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"Sometimes the best way to fit in is to stand out," is a tagline from Kinky Boots. How has this been true in the songstress' own life?

"I've always been a stalwart believer in being who you are. If you don't, in the end you will have more pain and suffering," Lauper said. "You have to stand your ground and be who you are and find acceptance -- if not in others, than in yourself. That's the road to happiness...and as Oscar Wilde said, and is quoted by [the character] Lola: 'Be Yourself: everyone else is already taken.'"

The National Tour of Kinky Boots is hitting cities across America now, and Lauper is standing tall with her cast selections.

"We have an amazing cast and KTP (Kyle Taylor Parker), who plays Lola, was actually one of the original Angels on Broadway. Stephen Booth, who plays Charlie, is just great. He is a great singer and KTP and Stephen have a really special chemistry. They lead a really strong cast and, again, I think because the show tells a great story that people can relate to and embrace, the word of mouth just grows and grows, so we are so lucky to have an audience full night to night," Lauper said of the national tour.

Has Lauper gone hands-free with the show yet? Not quite, and that's fine by her!

"Well, we are always recasting certain parts. Kinky Boots started two years ago already, so it's just natural that people move on and roles have to be recast. We are also are opening in Korea at the end of the year, and then there will be lots more international productions down the road, so we're always meeting with theaters and actors and partners. I am very hands-on and wouldn't want it to be any other way," she said.

When Lauper isn't garnering the well-deserved attention from Kinky Boots, she's teaching others to Give a Damn.

"The Give a Damn Campaign is going great. We are actually just about to re-launch a whole new incredible website. When we first started the campaign, it was very celebrity-focused to help raise the awareness and draw people in. Now that we are 115,000 members strong, the Give a Damn Campaign is really now being driven by them and the new website and our messaging will be reflective of that. Also, we are still pushing for straight people to get informed and get involved in advancing equality for the LGBT community, but we are shifting the purpose to be more focused on ensuring that LGBT youth have a world that they can grow up in and feel safe to be who they are," she said, adding, "40 percent of all homeless youth are LGBT and we need to make sure that percentage goes from 40 to none, but we also need to make sure that these kids have a world in which they are equal."

The decked out entrepreneur and social activist also started another campaign via Kinky Boots called Just Be.

"Kinky Boots is all about celebrating who you are, and, as the line in the show says, 'Just be who you want to be.' So the fact that celebrities like Sara Bareilles, Josh Groban, Kelly Osbourne, Martina Navratilova and Mario Batali put on the boots for the campaign -- to support their favorite charities and celebrate their uniqueness -- is exactly the message of Kinky Boots."

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Learn more about Cyndi Lauper via her official website www.cyndilauper.com and book your tickets to see Kinky Boots here: www.kinkybootsthemusical.com.

Sorry, Adele's New Album Isn't Coming Out This Year

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In today's bummer news, Adele will release an album this year. Rumors about new music have circulated for months, but the New York Times now reports that we shouldn't expect a new album from her until at least next year.

According to a statement in her label's, XL Recordings, financial report, "There will not be a further new release by Adele during 2014 and consequently there will be a fall in XL’s turnover and profits." The report was filed on Thursday in Britain, where XL is headquartered. The report also noted that Adele's back catalogue -- namely her 2011 album "21," which sold over 25 million copies -- counted for a "significant proportion of the sales and profit" in 2013.

Adele fueled the rumor mill earlier this year when she tweeted a cryptic message in May: “Bye bye 25… See you again later in the year." Many fans took this to mean that she would release new music by the end of 2014, but, alas, they were wrong. May we suggest soothing your weary hearts with Aretha Franklin's new cover of "Rolling In The Deep"?

Kristen Stewart Addresses The Irony Of 'Clouds Of Sils Maria'

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"Clouds of Sils Maria," the latest film from French filmmaker Olivier Assayas, is one of the most meta, layered films on this year's festival circuit. Not only is the story about a revival of a play within a movie, but the casting itself plays a big part in how we perceive the characters.

Assayas's film, which screened as part of the New York Film Festival this month, follows Maria Enders (Juliette Binoche), a famous French actress whose big break was playing the young lead role in a play 20 years prior. Now she has the opportunity to star in the revival of the play, only this time as an older woman opposite the character for which she became known. As Maria runs lines with her personal assistant, Valentine (Kristen Stewart), their relationship begins to mirror and complicate that of the women in the play.

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The fictional play, which Assayas described during a press conference as a "condensed, brutalized version" of Rainer Werner Fassbinder's "The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant," follows a fatal attraction between an older woman and her manipulative young assistant. As the film progresses, the lines blur between Maria's relationship to the play 20 years ago and the dynamics between Maria and Valentine, Maria and Jo-Ann Ellis (Chloe Grace Moretz), the actress playing the younger role, and Maria and her past self.

The plot deepens as Assayas' story becomes dense with thick layers of intertwining relationships. The actresses who star in the film are equally important to its concept. On one level, Binoche's relationship to her character is very connected to her own relationship to Assayas, as she starred in 1985's "Rendez-vous," a film that he co-wrote and which launched her into the spotlight.

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Kristen Stewart, though, embodies the fascinating real-life connections. Multiple instances in the film wink at the actress' celebrity status and some prior scandals. In one scene, Valentine asks Maria whether the actress had a romantic affair with the play's director when she was younger. "You wouldn't understand," Maria says to Valentine. But the audience might: Stewart had a highly-publicized affair with filmmaker Rupert Sanders while the director was still married. Valentine also helps Maria evade the paparazzi multiple times, which her character angrily calls "cockroaches." The irony is hilarious and makes Stewart's great performance even more enjoyable to watch.

"I had to reign in the glee on my face. I had to make sure my cheeks weren’t turning red and I wasn’t in hysterical laughter when I said some of the lines that I said in the movie," Stewart said during a press conference on Wednesday. There are other moments in the film where Moretz's Jo-Ann, who is constantly in the tabloids for DUIs and affairs, is a clear commentary on celebrity culture and the media. "I think that my position -- just the life that I’m living and my experience -- sort of gave [the film] this irony," Stewart said with a laugh. "[It] just made it a bit more relevant and interesting."

Stewart was originally cast in the role of Jo-Ann, which may have made for some all too obvious allusions. But Assayas revealed that he initially pictured Stewart in the role of Valentine, and ultimately gave her the part once they met. Unlike many films, "Clouds of Sils Maria" is a work of art that begs audiences to be aware of its internal references to Hollywood and celebrity culture. "It’s a movie where you ultimately never forget that you’re watching those actresses," Assayas said. "It's part of what the film’s about."

"Clouds of Sils Maria" opens in March 2015.

Chris Hardwick Celebrates 11 Years Sober By Sharing Photos Of His Former Self

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Surely you're familiar with Chris Hardwick, Nerdist frontman and host of "@Midnight." But do you know Peter Hardwick?

That's what Hardwick calls his former, alcohol-affected self, of whom he shared some startling images of on Wednesday night's "@Midnight."

Watch the clip above to see Hardwick and his guests, Sara Schaefer, Cash Levy and T.J. Miller, poke fun at the old photos that clearly show how far the host has come in his recovery.

"@Midnight" airs week nights at (duh) midnight on Comedy Central.

Jennifer Garner Proves Ben Affleck Is A Feminist

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Jennifer Garner is certainly a busy actress: The 42-year-old is currently promoting "Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day," just one of the four films she's wrapped in 2014. But according to a recent interview with Elle Magazine, it's Garner's husband, Ben Affleck, who especially encourages her to act.

As cover star of Elle Magazine's Women In Hollywood Issue, Garner opened up to the magazine about how her career goals changed after having children, and how her husband's support motivates her:

My ambition shifted when I had kids in a way that I didn't anticipate. I became more ambitious for my life as a whole, and for that kind of health and happiness of the overall family unit. And that very much includes my husband and very much includes me. My husband is always the one saying to me, 'You have to work, you have to work. This is part of who you are. We'll figure it out.' That's powerful, when your partner has that serious mantra.


The couple's support for each others' careers is clearly mutual. Garner recently told MTV News about her excitement for Affleck's upcoming role in "Batman V Superman: Dawn of Justice," and even joked around about his full-frontal scene in "Gone Girl" on an episode of "The Ellen Degeneres Show" on Wednesday.

Brimming with inspiring words, Garner also told Elle of the best advice she'd ever received, courtesy of her mother:

"It's recycled from Ma Ingalls from 'Little House on the Prairie' -- something my mom quoted," Garner told the magazine. "'Happiness is your own responsibility. Weeping may last through the night, but joy comes in the morning.'"

Garner, along with Elizabeth Banks, Annette Bening, Tina Fey, Jessica Lange, Brie Larson, Gugu Mbatha-Raw and Zoe Saldana, is honored in the November issue of Elle -- on newsstands and available as a digital edition on Oct. 21.

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George Clooney Interrupted His Honeymoon To Debut The 'Tomorrowland' Teaser

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Disney unveiled the first footage from "Tomorrowland" at New York Comic-Con on Thursday afternoon, thus pulling back the curtain on one of 2015's most secretive summer movies, and interrupting George Clooney's newlywed status in the process.

"It is not lost on me that I'm spending my honeymoon at Comic-Con," joked Clooney, who was a surprise guest during the Disney panel inside Manhattan's Jacob K. Javits Center. The 53-year-old actor married Amal Alamuddin on Sept. 27 in Venice, Italy and had been vacationing with her in England following the nuptials.

Perhaps the mystery surrounding "Tomorrowland" was justification for the actor's surprise visit. Directed by Brad Bird, the Disney film has been in development since 2013, and rumors have simmered about its hush-hush plot since the project was first announced. The newly released teaser and the film's plot description shed some light on the proceedings: In a world gone mad -- eagle-eyed trailer viewers will notice a television chyron about rioting on the East Coast -- a curious teenager named Casey (Britt Robertson) and a former "boy genius" named Frank Walker (Clooney) "embark on a danger-filled mission to unearth the secrets of an enigmatic place somewhere in time and space known only as 'Tomorrowland.' What they must do there changes the world -- and them -- forever." Hugh Laurie and Kathryn Hahn co-star.



"If you guys need to know anything about the plot, just ask me," Clooney said about the top-secret storyline, before adding with a deadpan charm: "Everybody dies in the end."

That's unlikely, but co-writer Damon Lindelof did allude to an unconventional denouement.

"One of the movies we talked about was 'Close Encounters of the Third Kind' and the fact that it was essentially a discovery movie," Lindelof explained about "Tomorrowland." That 1977 classic from Steven Spielberg famously ends with its lead character, played by Richard Dreyfuss, leaving his family behind for a life of space exploration with the alien visitors. ("I would never have made 'Close Encounters' the way I made it in '77, because I have a family that I would never leave," Spielberg has since said about the film's conclusion.) But whether something similar happens in "Tomorrowland" is wild speculation: the Comic-Con panel was mostly devoid of answers about the film's plot, beyond what was revealed in the teaser trailer and also second piece of footage, which showcased Frank and Casey fighting off humanoid robots inside Frank's home.

"It was larger than most things I've ever been around," Clooney said of making the film. "The beautiful thing about it is that Brad Bird has a real vision of the film he wants to make. It was fun for all of us to play in this giant toy box, and help him realize what he wants."

According to Clooney, production on "Tomorrowland" took the cast all over the world. "Hugh and I got to get in trouble in the Bahamas," he said. "Two former television doctors." Clooney, of course, rose to fame thanks to his performance on "ER"; Laurie played Dr. Gregory House on "House M.D." for eight seasons. "Bring on that McSteamy guy," Clooney said, referring to Eric Dane's character on "Grey's Anatomy." "We'll take them all on, TV doctors."

This was Clooney's first ever appearance at Comic-Con, and the actor joked he was "disinvited" from the annual gathering of geek culture because of his role as Batman in the infamous 1997 flop, "Batman and Robin."

"I met Adam West back there, I was like, 'Hey, I'm really sorry,'" Clooney said as the audience roared with laughter. "We fist-bumped and I was like, 'Yeah, just hit me. Sorry about the nipples on the suit. Freeze, freeze! I apologize.'"

It goes without saying that Clooney has come a long way since that film, but he was happy to acknowledge the fact anyway.

"I'm so barely in the teaser," he said to Bird and Lindelof about the "Tomorrowland" trailer. "I don't want to say anything, but I'm a big star."

"Tomorrowland" is due out on May 22, 2015.

Chelsea Handler Says Being Friends With Jennifer Aniston Is 'A Burden'

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Having a celebrity friend sounds pretty awesome to us, but Chelsea Handler told HuffPost Live on Thursday that being friends with Jennifer Aniston can be a real burden.

"Everywhere I go, people ask me about Jennifer Aniston's wedding. Do you know what it's like to walk down a red carpet and [reporters] go 'When are Jen and Justin [Theroux] getting married?' like I'm in charge of that," she said.

(Watch Handler discuss her relationship with Aniston in the clip above.)

Despite her playful complaints about the former "Friends" star, Handler isn't always the easiest friend to deal with, either. The 39-year-old told HuffPost Live's Roy Sekoff about her habit of exposing her breasts in vacation pictures, despite her friends' protests. Watch the clip below:



Check out the full HuffPost Live segment with Handler here.

'SNL' Star Jan Hooks Dead At 57

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Former "Saturday Night Live" star Jan Hooks died on Thursday. Her representative confirmed the news to HuffPost Entertainment, but had no further comment on Hooks' death. She was 57 years old.

Hooks appeared on "SNL" from 1986-91 and most recently guest starred on "30 Rock" as Jenna Maroney's mother, Verna. She was a regular on "Designing Women" from 1991-93 and appeared on TV shows "3rd Rock From The Sun," "The Martin Short Show," "The Dana Carvey Show," "The Simpsons," "Futurama" and "Primetime Glick." While on "SNL," she was known for her recurring character Candy Sweeney of "The Sweeney Sisters." She also impersonated Bette Davis, Betty Ford, Nancy Reagan, Sinéad O'Connor, Jodie Foster and Hillary Clinton.

Originally, Hooks was considered for the 1985 "SNL" cast, but was passed over for Joan Cusack. She was hired the next season alongside Dana Carvey, Phil Hartman and Nora Dunn. In one of her most memorable sketches, she played Brenda the Waitress in "The Diner" with Alec Baldwin.

Hooks was born near Atlanta in 1957 and began her career as part of famed comedy troupe The Groundlings. Prior to joining "SNL," she landed a small but notable part in "Pee-wee's Big Adventure" as a tour guide at the Alamo.

Laverne Cox And bell hooks Talk How To Survive The Patriarchy

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Can you wear high heels without pandering to the patriarchy?

It's... complicated. At an Oct. 7 panel at The New School in New York, renowned feminist thinker bell hooks and "Orange Is The New Black" actress and trans activist Laverne Cox wrestled through these issues of feminism and identity.




The two expressed deep admiration for one another; Cox talked about how bell hooks' work changed her life, and hooks called Cox a "goddess for justice."


Still, hooks cautioned, against making their talk "one of those little love feasts" commonly occur when likeminded activists share a stage. And she definitely didn't skirt around tense issues, questioning Cox's traditionally "feminine" style of high heels and a long blonde wig.

Cox defended her choices, saying, "This is where I feel empowered, ironically, and comfortable. I think it's important to note that not all trans women are embracing this, but this trans woman does. And this trans woman feels empowered by this."

Cox recognizes the tension between conforming to traditionally feminine beauty standards and challenging the "imperialist white supremacist patriarchy," she told the audience. "Am I feeding into the patriarchal gaze with my blonde wig?" she said. (bell hooks quickly answers, "Yes.")

For some, choosing to portray an image that the culture values is not just a preference, Cox said: It's a way to be seen. She talked about our society's "erasure" of diverse bodies, and how women sometimes must base their choices on a desire to be visible. "I have not ever been interested in being invisible, in being erased," she said. She uses her self presentation as a way to succeed in a society that all too often ignores the lives of black trans woman.

Like Cox, many women feel empowered by the ways they construct their appearance. Still, hooks cautions against calling all of these choices inherently "feminist."

hooks has long negotiated the meaning of the ever-morphing feminist movement. Her approach has been overwhelmingly inclusive; After all, she penned Feminism Is For Everybody, which radically expanded the movement.

But just because feminism is for everybody doesn't mean feminism can be everything. "If feminism is all things to all people, than what is it? How do we locate it as a radical movement in our lives?" hooks said.

She also pointed out that while women are free to make choices, they have to acknowledge that their choices don't exist in a vacuum. She suggested that when most black role models in the entertainment world sport "white" hair styles, it "may be sending a message to somebody younger that 'I must be self-hating.'"

As some women must make choices in order to be seen, women who are seen are asked to carefully measure their choices. The eternal feminist paradox persists, but we're happy to watch these two talk about it. No matter what shoes they wear.

You can watch the entire discussion on the New School's Livestream.

Richard Gere and Bill Murray Keep Up the Good Work

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Seeing Richard Gere and Bill Murray -- as well as their new films -- back to back this week invites comparison: movie stars for the past 35 years, they continue to do superlative work in both Hollywood and independent films. Murray anchors St. Vincent -- a delightful and touching first feature opening today in NY and LA -- while Gere plays a homeless man in the NY Film Festival selection, Time Out of Mind.

Their film careers took off simultaneously in the late 1970s. After a stint on Saturday Night Live, Murray made the popular comedy Meatballs (1979); Gere's breakthrough was in a more dramatic register with Looking for Mr. Goodbar (1977) and Days of Heaven (1979). In their latest films, each now plays a protagonist on a downward spiral, a New Yorker who has lost job, finances and family... but not the taste for booze.

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Photo Credit: Mike Coppola/Getty Images


At a Film Society of Lincoln Center dinner honoring Gere last night, the 65-year-old actor spoke warmly and candidly about his career. When Kent Jones -- Director of the NY Film Festival -- asked him how he gravitated toward acting, Gere replied, "I grew up in the suburbs, in 'Leave It to Beaver' land. I was aware of dreams, and preferred looking up at the stars at night. Then I studied music as a trumpeter, and even played with the Syracuse Symphony in my teens. But guitar and piano became more interesting to me, because girls liked them. I graduated from high school in '67 when so much experimental theater was happening."

If Murray's career is mainly in film -- including Ghostbusters, Rushmore, Hyde Park on Hudson, and the groundbreaking Groundhog Day (1993) -- Gere has also performed onstage, notably in Bent (1980), playing a homosexual concentration camp inmate during World War II. When asked about theater versus film, he said, "I'm easily seduced by an audience. But the repetition of that deadens me. I'm more suited to the pressure and spontaneity of coming up with something in the moment."

Gere remains one of our most under-rated actors. Despite memorable performances in such movies as An Officer and a Gentleman, American Gigolo, Pretty Woman, Primal Fear, Chicago, The Hoax, and Arbitrage, he has never received an Oscar nomination. (Murray was nominated for Lost in Translation). Less interested in accolades than reinvention, Gere acknowledged that Time Out of Mind -- which he also produced -- is a risky enterprise.

Neither the actor nor his character asks for sympathy, as the homeless New Yorker George reveals little of his past or inner life. Rather, the drama -- directed by Oren Moverman -- is an unsentimentally realist chronicle of a man's effort to find a bed, a meal, a drink. On the first day of shooting in the downtown area of Astor Place, cameras in a nearby Starbucks captured Gere panhandling. With a cap pulled down to his eyes, he was not recognizable to the dozens of people who walked by as if he wasn't there. Moreover, they shot in actual homeless shelters -- one night in Bellevue and five in Brooklyn.

"We were demanding the audience to let go of normal expectations of storytelling," he admitted. "We wanted to hit something unknowable, un-nameable--a yearning to be alive and to connect -- and we wanted no villains. The world doesn't need bad guys to explore the unknown."

Bill Murray (now 64) struck a much lighter note when he was introduced by writer-director Ted Melfi at the St. Vincent premiere Monday night at the Ziegfeld Theatre. He said he was holding two bags of popcorn because he didn't know how long a first-time director would talk before the movie began.

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Bill Murray in St. Vincent


St. Vincent turned out to be a comedy with dramatic heft, whose humbug Vincent has redeeming qualities in addition to ferocious comic energy. He gradually mellows after a new neighbor (Melissa McCarthy) asks him to watch her son Oliver (Jaeden Lieberher) while she works hospital shifts. We are led to understand the causes of Vincent's calcified life, whereas Gere's George reveals only the consequences of a rootless and inebriated existence.

The protagonist of Time Out of Mind is far from the enlightened humanitarian playing him. Gere is a founding member of "Tibet House," a nonprofit organization dedicated to the preservation of Tibetan culture. When Jones asked the practicing Buddhist how his acting and spiritual practice inform each other, Gere answered, "Everything one does in life is certainly informed by how open your heart is, and how much wisdom you are able to manifest."

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Annette Insdorf, Director of Undergraduate Film Studies at Columbia University, is the author of PHILIP KAUFMAN.

Spend The Next Two Hours Watching 'The Empire Strikes Back Uncut'

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Cut together from more than 480 fan-made segments, "The Empire Strikes Back Uncut" is your ultimate time waster of the day. The two-hour movie is a shot-for-shot remake of "Star Wars: Episode V" culled together in a way that may recall "Be Kind Rewind" (because not enough stuff actually recalls "Be Kind Rewind"; we got your back, Michel Gondry). "This labor of love is the product of thousands of 'Star Wars' fans using their own actors, props, animation, artwork, or action figures to tell the story of 'The Empire Strikes Back,'" reads a press release from Disney announcing the video. The clip went live on the official "Star Wars" website to coincide with the return of "Star Wars Fan Film Awards." More information on that initiative can be found at StarWars.com. For now, just watch "Empire Strikes Back Uncut" below (and wait patiently for "The Phantom Menace: Uncut," we guess).

'A Merry Friggin' Christmas' Trailer Shows Robin Williams In One Of His Last Roles

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ET Online debuted the new trailer for "A Merry Friggin' Christmas," one of the last films to feature Robin Williams. Here, Williams plays as a disgruntled father who embarks on a road trip with his estranged son (Joel McHale).

Williams also filmed "Night At The Museum: Secret Of The Tomb" and the animated movie "Absolutely Anything" before his death on Aug. 11. Co-starring Lauren Graham, Candice Bergen and Clark Duke, "A Merry Friggin' Christmas' is due out Nov. 7.

Nicholas Hoult Uncomfortably Discusses Jennifer Lawrence's Leaked Nude Photos

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For a surefire way to make a conversation exceedingly awkward, take "Good Day New York" host Rosanna Scotto's approach during an interview with Nicholas Hoult in which she asked if Jennifer Lawrence's leaked nude photos were intended for him.

On Thursday, Hoult appeared on the show to promote his new movie, "Young Ones," but the questioning veered sharply off-course when Scotto asked:

"Speaking of friends: Jennifer Lawrence, she's been making a lot of news lately because of those pictures that were hacked. And I think they might have been pictures that were sent to you. I was just wondering if you have any comment at all. I know she talked about the people who downloaded them were basically sex offenders. I was wondering how you felt about that?"

Already backed into a corner, the 24-year-old actor looked uncomfortable, and quietly replied, "It's shocking that things like that happen in the world. It's a shame."

Earlier this week, Lawrence spoke out about the incident for the first time since the photos leaked Labor Day weekend. The actress indirectly spoke of Hoult, from whom she split this past summer, telling Vanity Fair:

"I don’t have anything to say I’m sorry for. I was in a loving, healthy, great relationship for four years. It was long distance, and either your boyfriend is going to look at porn or he’s going to look at you.”

Behold, The Most Famous TV Hairstyles Of All Time

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When we reflect on TV hairstyles that have made a huge impact on our personal style, we can't help but namedrop Lucille Ball's curly pompadour, Jennifer Aniston's "The Rachel," Farrah Fawcett's feathered flip or even the Kardashians' down-to-there hair extensions (though we've learned the hard way what fake hair does to our heads).

Needless to say, we are still inspired by TV hair when it comes to choosing our next cut or color. And, at least according to Living Proof celebrity hairstylist Chris McMillan (aka the man behind "The Rachel" on "Friends"), that inspiration comes from our weekly connection with the characters.

"Rachel significantly changed her hair from the beginning. First season of the pilot, her hair is worn natural and darker. Then right after the pilot, I cut it and you definitely saw a transformation," McMillan told HuffPost Style. "It was like, 'Oh, look! Rachel blow dried it straighter and her layers are getting longer and her bangs are getting shorter."

Looking back, it's worth noting that Aniston's iconic TV hairdo is one of the earliest examples of the popular lob haircut that so many celebs love today.

Hairdresser to the stars Ted Gibson seconds McMillan adding, "These TV characters become a part of our lives -- it's only natural to want to emulate them. I always say that hair changes everything. Hair changes a woman's outlook on her life, her career, family and love. Think about Keri Russell's 'Felicity.' Viewers loved her for her luscious, long, curly hair. Women everywhere were happy to wear their natural curls and bought into all kinds of mousses, gels and serums to keep their curls voluminous and frizz free. People connected to her because of her hair, and once she chopped it off, the show soon ended."

Check out some of the most memorable small screen 'dos below, and tell us which you think is the most famous of all time.




Richard Gere Says Divorce Helped Shape His Latest Performance In 'Time Out Of Mind'

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There's no doubt about it: Divorce is a draining, sometimes crippling experience. But in a recent sit-down interview, Richard Gere revealed that splitting up from estranged wife Carey Lowell last year actually bettered his performance in his latest film, "Time Out Of Mind."

During an hour-long conversation on his career at the Film Society of Lincoln Center Wednesday, a moderator asked Gere if decades spent working on "his craft" had readied him for this latest performance as a homeless man living on the streets of New York.

The 65-year-old actor dug a little deeper than that: “What probably really helped was that I was right in the middle of a divorce . . . The emotions were right on the surface," he said, according to the New York Post.

When the moderator said he hadn't planned on mentioning the divorce, Gere reportedly joked, “But you were."

Gere confirmed his split from Lowell, whom he married in 2002, back in September 2013. The "Pretty Woman" star was previously married to supermodel Cindy Crawford for four years before they called it quits in 1995.

It hasn't been all work and no play for the actor since the separation. In April, sources told E! News and Us Weekly that Gere had quietly begun dating model and "Top Chef" host Padma Lakshmi. In August, the pair were spotted enjoying dinner together in Englewood, NJ.


Keep in touch! Check out HuffPost Divorce on Facebook and Twitter. Sign up for our newsletter here.

Phaedra Parks, 'Real Housewives Of Atlanta' Star, Calls It Quits With Husband Apollo Nida

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With the recent trend of celebrity break-ups taking over Hollywood by storm, another notable couple has added their name to the growing list of desolate splits.

E! Online reports “Real Housewives of Atlanta” star Phaedra Parks has reportedly called it quits with her husband and convicted felon Apollo Nida after nearly five years of marriage, and has "retained an attorney with the intent of amicably ending her marriage," according to her rep Steve Honig.

In recent months, rumors began to swirl surrounding the couple’s marital status following Nida’s July 8 guilty plea sentencing for conspiracy to commit mail, wire and bank fraud. And apparently Nida had his own thoughts about the situation as well. During a May radio interview on “The Ryan Cameron Show,” he shared his thoughts on what Parks should do during his current 8-year prison sentence.

“I think Phaedra, in a perfect world, should be supportive as a wife should be...But if she chooses to derail from the plan, then that's what she chooses to do,” he said about his wife, with whom he fathered two children. “Apollo is prepared for whatever happens in life. Whatever's been thrown at me, I deal with it. I would like to say I would want her to stay around and do what a wife should do. But tomorrow’s not promised."

To add more insult to injury, Nida later revealed in a July BE100 Radio interview that Parks “didn’t even f****ing show up for my sentencing. I’m still kinda salty about that, but whatever.”

As for Phadra’s side of the story? Fans will have the opportunity to hear the entertainment attorney’s thoughts on her now-defunct marriage during a candid interview with Ellen DeGeneres airing on Oct. 15.

'Twin Peaks' Is Coming Back, But Will It Be Good? Let's Discuss On HuffPost Entertainment's Podcast

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Each week, HuffPost Entertainment's Podcast examines a different pop culture phenomenon. This week, it's all about Twin Peaks. Welcome to TwinPeaksCast..



On Oct. 6, Showtime revealed that "Twin Peaks" would return for a nine-episode run on the network in 2016, which coincides with the 25th anniversary of the beloved cult series. For fans, the revival is long-awaited -- and not just because co-creators David Lynch and Mark Frost had teased its return in the days leading up to the official announcement.

In light of the news, HuffPost Entertainment managing editor (and "Twin Peaks" novice) Christopher Rosen asked Carol Hartsell, senior video and comedy editor at The Huffington Post, and Pieter Dom, the creator of popular "Twin Peaks" fan site welcometotwinpeaks.com, about the the series, how has it influenced the current television landscape and what will it take for the series to be successful in 2016? Listen above!

Previous HuffPost Entertainment Podcast Installments
Episode 1: BootyCast

Hugh Grant Drops Out Of 'Bridget Jones 3'

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The third installment of "Bridget Jones" will not include Hugh Grant after all, this according to Hugh Grant. The actor, who starred in the first two films as Daniel Cleaver, reportedly said in an interview with Free Radio that he has dropped out of the movie.

"I decided not to do it," he said. "But I think they're going to go ahead and do it without Daniel. The book’s excellent, by the way, but the script is completely different -- well, the script as I last saw it a few years ago.”

The third film is to be based on Helen Fielding's third book, "Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy," which received excellent reviews last year.

Two years ago Grant told Mandrake that filming of the movie had been put on hold due to rewrites, but would no doubt feature original stars Colin Firth and Renée Zellweger. "Bridget Jones 3" was first announced back in August 2011 and Grant's most recent announcement now gives us little hope that this film will actually get made.

Grant's rep did not return HuffPost Entertainment's immediate request for comment.

24 Baby Name Ideas For Twins, Inspired By Celebrities

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It’s twice as hard to name twins, especially if you’re trying to avoid the old matchy-matchy trap. And because celebrities (for better or worse), have a tremendous influence on baby names, we've put the two together. Here, we take a look at some of the prominent celebs who’ve produced multiples, and see how we think they’ve handled the challenge.

Charlie & Poppy

anna paquin

Born in 2012, the names of the boy-girl twins of Anna Paquin and "True Blood" co-star Stephen Moyer were kept under wraps for almost a year. The couple finally revealed two peppy names, Poppy blending perfectly with the floral name of Moyer’s older daughter, Lilac.

Charlie Tamara Tulip & Dolly Rebecca Rose

rebecca romijn jerrry

Rebecca Romijn and Jerry O’Connell obviously put a lot of thought into the choosing and balancing of their girl twin names. Two nickname firsts, two floral thirds, and two 3-syllable seconds, one honoring mom Rebecca. Dolly is a tribute to Dolly Parton, Charlie is O’Connell’s brother and Tamara is Romijn’s sister.

Darby Galen & Sullivan Patrick

patrick dempsey wife

Patrick Dempsey stayed true to his Irish roots when naming his boys. Darby shares his dad’s middle name, while Sullivan has Patrick as his middle. Dempsey’s older daughter bears the Irish spelling of her name, Tallula.

Dexter Henry Lorcan & Frank Harlan James

diana krall

Leave it to a pair of hip musicians, Diana Krall and Elvis Costello, to put together a set of really jazzy-cool names. Unfortunately, they have never revealed the specific inspirations behind their choices. Dexter bears a slight resemblance to Elvis’s real name Declan.

Hazel Patricia & Phinnaeus Walter

julia roberts moder

When Julia Roberts used Hazel and Phinnaeus (especially with that archaic spelling) in 2004, her choices were seen as slightly eccentric, when Hazel was way down at Number 681. Recently chosen by Emily Blunt and John Krasinski, she is now at 157, while Phinnaeus Walter Moder is known as Finn, one of the hottest boys’ names, also having his grandfather’s name as his middle.

Juno & Rex

will champion coldplay

British Coldplay drummer/vocalist Will Champion was ahead of the curve on baby names when he named his twins in 2008, picking up on Juno just a year after the indie hit movie was released, and also an early user of the kingly Rex, which is just picking up steam now.

Marion Loretta Elwell & Tabitha Hodge

sarah jessica parker broderick

Stylish couple Sarah Jessica Parker and Matthew Broderick made some solid, offbeat choices for their girls, including giving them unequal numbers of middle names. Both Hodge and Elwell are surnames from SJP’s mother’s family; ancestor Esther Elwell was one of the accused in the Salem witch trials.

Maximilian & Emme Maribel

jennifer lopez max emme

Like most Maximilians, Jennifer Lopez and Marc Anthony’s boy immediately became known as Max, forming a compatible pairing with twin sister Emme. Max has long been a celebrity fave, going back to the now grown sons of Dustin Hoffman and Steven Spielberg, while Emme followed the Emily-Emma trend. A nice twist is that Emme echoes the first letter of Max without them sharing the initial.

Monroe & Moroccan

mariah carey nick monroe

Just call the girl-boy twins of Mariah Carey and Nick Cannon Roc and Ro -- as their parents do. The highly publicized inspirations for their names were one of Mariah’s idols, Marilyn Monroe, and the Moroccan-style décor of the area of their NY apartment that was the site of their marriage proposal.

Nelson & Eddy

celine dion nelson

Celine Dion had valid reasons behind her boys’ names, probably unaware that together they formed the name of a Golden Age Hollywood singing star. Nelson was named after Nelson Mandela, whom Dion met when touring South Africa; Eddy was a tribute to her first record producer, Eddy Marnay.

Valentino & Matteo

ricky martin

Born in Puerto Rico as Enrique Martin Morales, Ricky Martin clearly embraced his Latino heritage when naming his twin boys. Valentino is one of the most romantic of names, dating back to the days of silent film. Matteo is a real crossover hit, also chosen by Colin Firth.

Vivienne Marcheline & Knox Leon

angelina jolie brad pitt

These Jolie-Pitt twins, born in 2008, may have had the greatest influence of all the pairs on this list. Vivienne’s name caused a spike in the popularity of both this French spelling and the more familiar Vivian; Knox, which follows the family tradition of x-ending boy names (Maddox, Pax) and was found in the Pitt ancestral history, propelled this old Scottish surname onto the SSA list in the year following his birth.



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